State v. Fritschen

802 P.2d 558, 247 Kan. 592, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 7, 1990
Docket64,225
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 802 P.2d 558 (State v. Fritschen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fritschen, 802 P.2d 558, 247 Kan. 592, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 190 (kan 1990).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

This is a direct appeal by the defendant, James F. Fritschen, from his convictions for one count of rape and two counts of first-degree murder. Fritschen’s appeal concerns whether the confessions he gave should have been suppressed. The facts are essentially undisputed.

*593 Janice Hough and Lee Richardson lived in Hough’s house in Newton. On April 10, 1988, Hough and Richardson were found stabbed to death in the house. Richardson had been stabbed 23 times; Hough had been stabbed 10 times and raped. Through interviews with neighbors and friends, the authorities determined that Fritschen had previously lived in Hough’s home and had been to her house late on April 9. The authorities were also aware that Fritschen frequently carried a knife.

On April 13, two Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) agents, Bill Mueller and Floyd Bradley, interviewed Fritschen at Fritschen’s residence in Hutchinson, Kansas, while two other agents talked to Fritschen’s wife. Fritschen willingly talked with the agents and told them that on Friday, April 8, he had brought his wife to her sister’s house in Newton and, after dropping her off, had gone to see a friend, Clarence Williams. He told the agents he stayed there until 10:30 p.m. and had gone to see Hough and Richardson at Hough’s house for about 30 minutes before he returned to Hutchinson. He told the agents that on Saturday evening he did go to Newton, but he claimed that he did not go to Hough’s that evening — that he went bowling, then to a club, then to visit a friend, then to visit another friend, who turned out not to be home, then to Charlie’s Restaurant, and then home.

Fritschen told the agents that he did own a knife, but that he did. not know where it was. Fritschen signed a consent to search the house, allowed the agents to seize some knives and clothing, and later gave them finger and palm prints. The next day Fritschen agreed to allow a physician hired by KBI agents to examine scratches the agents had noticed on his upper body. The results of the examination of the scratches were inconclusive. After being advised of his Miranda rights, Fritschen agreed to provide a blood sample.

Nine days later, KBI Agent Bradley contacted Fritschen, and Fritschen agreed to come to the Hutchinson Law Enforcement Center after work. Later, Fritschen called and said he did not have enough gasoline to make it, but he agreed to let the agents give him a ride.

Agents Mueller and Bradley went to Fritschen’s house and gave him a ride to the Center. Fritschen was not arrested or *594 handcuffed. Upon arriving at the Center, Fritschen was advised of his Miranda rights and told that he was free to leave. At first, Fritschen told the same story he had told on April 13. The agents confronted him with statements by other witnesses, but Fritschen claimed they were wrong.

Fritschen eventually told the agents that he wanted to see a lawyer. Bradley and Mueller ended the interview. Fritschen asked how he could get in touch with the agents, and they gave him a card with their phone numbers on it and started to take him home. On their way out of the building, the agents’ supervisor, George Schureman, stopped them, asked where they were going, asked if anything had been cleared up, and then asked if Fritschen would mind talking to him. Schureman was not aware that Fritschen had asked to talk to a lawyer.

Fritschen agreed to talk to Schureman, and the two went into an interview room. Schureman told Fritschen that in similar cases many people were able to justify the crimes in their minds and it was important for Fritschen to straighten things out. Fritschen told Schureman that he wanted to talk to Mueller again. Fritschen also asked Schureman to get him a pack of cigarettes.

When Schureman left the interview room, Mueller told Schureman that Fritschen had said he wanted to talk to a lawyer. Schureman returned with the cigarettes and told Fritschen that, because he had requested a lawyer, the agents could not talk to him unless he requested them to. Schureman also said that if laboratory tests came out positive, Fritschen would be arrested. The agents allowed Fritschen to sit in the interview room alone for several minutes (as long as 11 minutes).

Fritschen called for Mueller to come back into the interview room and said to Mueller, “I hope you can understand my position. I want to tell you what I can.” Mueller, as had Schureman, advised Fritschen that he did not have to talk to him and that he had a right to a lawyer. At some point, Bradley reentered the room. Fritschen started talking without the agents asking questions.

Fritschen told the agents that his initial version of what had happened on Saturday, April 9, was correct up to the point when he went home from Charlie’s Restaurant. He told the agents that after he left the restaurant he again went past a friend’s house, *595 but that she was not home yet. He then told the agents that the next thing he remembered was driving back to Hutchinson with his shirt off, blood on his chest and arms, and his survival knife lying on the seat beside him with blood on it.

Fritschen told the agents he drove home and went to bed. The next morning, he discovered there was still blood on his chest and arms, and also on his thighs. He told the agents he took a shower and went back to bed. He told the agents that later Sunday he noticed the scratches on his body and went out and threw the knife in the trash, which was later taken to the landfill. Fritschen told the agents that he assumed he had committed the murders, but did not remember doing so.

After the initial interview by the agents, the agents prepared a written statement which Fritschen read and signed. Following these statements, Mueller and Bradley contacted the Harvey County Attorney, and Fritschen was placed under arrest several hours later.

Three days later, on April 25, while in the Harvey County Jail, Fritschen was interviewed by Harvey County Sheriff s Detectives Motter and Jolliff. They advised him of his rights and he agreed to talk to them. The officers told Fritschen they knew he had given a statement to KBI agents, but they wanted to know the details of what really had occurred.

Fritschen told the officers that when he went to Hough’s house, she answered the door, and they had a conversation in the living room. Fritschen said a confrontation developed and Hough slapped him. Fritschen said he “went off” and started to hit her. Fritschen told the officers that Richardson woke up and came out of a bedroom, so he stabbed Richardson with a knife.

Fritschen told the officers that these things would not have happened if he had not been drunk. The officers asked Fritschen if he could see himself in his mind stabbing Hough and Richardson and if he could see them lying dead in the bedroom. Fritschen became upset and nodded his head. He told the officers he would go crazy if he remembered any more of it. He told officers that he could remember Hough trying to pull him off Richardson while he was stabbing Richardson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
802 P.2d 558, 247 Kan. 592, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fritschen-kan-1990.